A method for transmitting an alarm over a cordless broadcast system having a base station in communication with a mobile unit and a computer. The computer includes a speech recognition system. The method includes requesting an alarm setting for a specified time with a voice command at the mobile unit and storing the requested alarm setting in the computer. The alarm is broadcast at the specified time to the mobile unit.
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1. A method for transmitting an alarm over a cordless broadcast system having a base station in communication with a mobile unit and a computer, the computer including a speech recognition system, the method comprising:
requesting an alarm setting for a specified time with a voice command at the mobile unit; storing the requested alarm setting in the computer; and broadcasting the alarm at the specified time to the mobile unit.
15. An alarm system for use in a cordless broadcast system, comprising:
a plurality of mobile units; a base station operable to broadcast an audio alarm signal to said plurality of mobile units; and a computer coupled to the base station and having a speech recognition system configured to recognize speech commands to enter an alarm setting, the computer operable to store said alarm setting and initiate a broadcast of the alarm from the base station to a specified mobile unit.
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The present invention relates generally to personal telephone systems configured to transmit and receive digital signals between mobile sets and fixed stations in a cordless system. More particularly, the present invention relates to an alarm system with speech recognition user interface for use in the cordless phone system.
Conventional alarm clocks are often difficult to program and provide only a limited selection of wake up signals (e.g., buzzer, music). Alarms clocks are typically located in places such as bedrooms which also contain telephones. Cordless telephones are typically placed in a bedroom if a house is not wired with telephone jacks in the bedroom.
Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) cordless phone systems provide a base unit capable of providing connections for a plurality of mobile units, such as telephone handsets. Such TDMA systems use time division to provide a plurality of slots, where the base (fixed unit) transmits to an individual mobile (portable) unit during a particular slot of time. One standard for TDMA systems is the Digital European Cordless Telecommunications (DECT) common interface standard described in ETS 300 175-2 and ETS 300 175-3, published by the European Telecommunication Standards Institute. The DECT standard is also discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,078,574 entitled "Process and Apparatus for Action Control in a Time Slot Method", to Boetzel et al., issued Jun. 20, 2000 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,088,338 entitled "Method and System for the Determination of the PSCN Parameter Starting From the MFN Parameter in a DECT Cordless Telephone System", to Rosella et al., issued Jul. 11, 2000, which are both incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
It would be desirable to provide an alarm capability in the cordless phone system to eliminate the need for an alarm clock. Furthermore, it would be advantageous if the user interface for the alarm was simplified from conventional alarm clocks.
A method for transmitting an alarm over a cordless broadcast system having a base station in communication with a mobile unit and a computer is disclosed. The computer includes a speech recognition system. The method generally comprises requesting an alarm setting for a specified time with a voice command at the mobile unit and storing the requested alarm setting in the computer. The alarm is broadcast at the specified time to the mobile unit.
An alarm system for use in a cordless broadcast system generally comprises a plurality of mobile units and a base station operable to broadcast audio to the plurality of mobile units. A computer, coupled to the base station, includes a speech recognition system configured to recognize speech commands to enter an alarm setting. The computer is operable to store the alarm setting and initiate a broadcast of the alarm from the base station to a specified mobile unit.
In another aspect of the invention, an alarm system for use in a cordless telephone system generally comprises a plurality of cordless telephones and a base station having a controller operable to broadcast audio to the plurality of cordless telephones. The system further includes a computer coupled to the base station and having an alarm application operable to receive alarm settings specifying a time, type of audio signal, and the cordless telephone, and transmit the alarm to the base station at the specified time such that the base station broadcasts the specified type of audio signal to the specified cordless telephone.
The above is a brief description of some deficiencies in the prior art and advantages of the present invention. Other features, advantages, and embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description, drawings, and claims.
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
The following description is presented to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention. Descriptions of specific embodiments and applications are provided only as examples and various modifications will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. The general principles described herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is not to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features described herein. For purpose of clarity, details relating to technical material that is known in the technical fields related to the invention have not been described in detail.
Referring now to the drawings, and first to FIG. I a cordless phone alarm system of the present invention is shown and generally indicated at 10. The system includes a cordless phone system comprising a base station 12 coupled to a computer 14 and a conventional telephone network 16. The network 16 may also be a network of base stations 12. The base station 12 is in communication with a plurality of mobile units 20 and provides communications between the plurality of units and the network 16. Although only four mobile units 20 are illustrated, other numbers of units are possible. In a preferred embodiment the mobile units 20 are cordless telephones configured to communicate with the phone network 16 through the base station 12. The base station 12 includes an alarm and call controller 19 which is configured to direct the alarm signal to an appropriate one of the plurality of mobile units 20. Different alarm signals may be directed to different mobile units 20 within a house. For example, a 6:00 am wake up alarm may be specified for the mobile unit 20 located in the master bedroom and a 7:00 am wake up signal directed to the mobile unit located in one of the children's bedrooms. There may also be a reminder alarm set for 2:00 pm for the mobile unit located in the kitchen to remind a parent to pick up the children from school. The controller 19 may also be configured to simultaneously send an alarm signal to two or more of the mobile units 20.
The mobile units 20 are configured to support a broadcast mode which allows the units to receive an audio alarm signal broadcast from the base station 12. Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) is preferably used to provide communication between each of the plurality of cordless phones 20 and the base station 12.
Each time slot may last, for example, for 416 μs, which corresponds to 480 bits. Each time slot may be split into a 32 bit synchronization field (sync-field) 25, a 388 bit D-field 26, a four bit Z-field 27, and a 56 bit guard space 28. The D-field 26 includes a 64 bit A-field 30, a 320 bit B-field 31, and a four bit X-field 32. The A-field 30 includes an eight bit header (H-field) 35, a 40 bit tail (T-field) 36, and a 16 bit cyclic redundancy check (CRC) 37. The B-field 31 includes a 320 bit information field (I-field) 39. The I-field may be used to carry data, such as part of a digitized audio message. The header describes information in the tail. Various commands and command information, such as identification commands, frequency information, slot/time information, and slot commands may be placed in the tail. The base station 12 and mobile units 20 receive messages and process the commands in the tail. Additional details of a cordless phone system that may be used with the present invention are provided in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/779,014 (Attorney Docket No. 99 E 7613US), entitled Audio Broadcast in Cordless Digital System, by Sydon et al., which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. It is to be understood that the cordless phone system may be different than described and shown herein without departing from the scope of the invention.
The alarm application 44 interfaces with the mobile units 20 through the base station 12. The alarm application 44 includes a user interface that is operable through the speech recognition system 42, to receive commands and input commands to enter an alarm setting. For example, a user may want a wake up call at 7:00 am at the mobile unit 20 located in a bedroom of the house. In addition to specifying a time for the alarm, the user may also specify the type of signal to be played at the selected time. The audio played by the mobile phone 20 may be a real audio broadcast or a prerecorded WAV file stored in the computer 14. For example, the user may want to hear the weather report, local news, a radio station, or prerecorded audio. The mobile unit 20 is configured to broadcast radio or streaming audio so that the alarm can provide real time audio as the alarm signal. The computer 14 obtains the live audio from the Internet 18. The alarm signal may also be a standard buzzer provided by the base station 12.
The alarm application 44 is configured to interface with more than one mobile unit 20 so that multiple alarms may be set throughout the house and at different times during the day. Each mobile unit 20 is assigned a unit identifier so that when the alarm is set, the alarm application recognizes the mobile unit from which the alarm is set. The alarm application 44 may also be configured such that a user can set an alarm for a different mobile unit 20 than the one from which he is setting the alarm. The alarm may also be set by the user at the computer 14 by a keyboard, microphone, or other input device. The computer 14 stores the alarm setting in the alarm database 46, which contains the time for each alarm, the recurrence for each alarm (e.g., every day, every weekday, every Sunday), the mobile unit identifier (or identifiers) to which the alarm is to be broadcast, and the type of alarm signal that is to be broadcast (e.g., news, weather, sports, music, bird noises, buzzer, etc.).
The system bus architecture of computer system 20 is represented by arrows 62 in FIG. 4. However, these arrows are only illustrative of one possible interconnection scheme serving to link the subsystems. For example, a local bus may be utilized to connect the central processor 50 to the system memory 52. Computer system 14 shown in
As previously described, the mobile unit 20 is configured to receive broadcast from the Internet in real time. When the base station is set to a broadcast mode, a system channel, such as 23, is set to transmit. If the computer is receiving a streaming audio signal from the Internet, the audio signal is sent to the controller 19 included in the base station 12. The controller 19 sets at least one system channel to broadcast whereas the remaining channels are set to receive a telephone call. The mobile unit 20 receives the streaming audio broadcast and when a call is received, the controller 19 switches the received call to one of the remaining channels assigned to receive calls. This allows the mobile unit 20 to switch from receiving the alarm signal to receiving a phone call. Once the call has been completed, the controller 19 can switch back to the system channel dedicated to broadcasting the alarm signal.
Although the present invention has been described in accordance with the embodiments shown, one of ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize that there could be variations made to the embodiments without departing from the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
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